To link to the entire object, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed the entire object, paste this HTML in websiteTo link to this page, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed this page, paste this HTML in website

ah FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1835. PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY SCOTT & WRIGHT. No. 1G, Vol. XXV Whole No. 147. JOURNAL AND SENTINEL. Edmund Deberry, P. C. aALLAGHEIt, EDITOR. Office on lligh-'treel, lecond door louth of Armstrong'! Hotel. TRRMST,vo Dollar! and Fifty Cent!, ia odeums, or Three Dollar!, al the ond of the yoor. No lubicriber allowed to dll-continue while he remain! Indebted to the office. .iitguitine H. Shepard, Abraham llencher, James Graham, Lewis Williams, Wm. B. Shepard, Jesse Speight, Micajah T. Hawkins, J. A. Bvntim, Wm. Monlgomery, James M'Kay, Henry W. Connor. SOUTH-CAROLINA From the New. York Journnl of Commirce. LIST OK MEMBERS ELECTED TO THETWEN-TY-FOURTH CONGRESS. As the Senate is now full, with the exception of Henry L. Pinckney, na member from Mississippi, we have thought f. W. Pickens, . nnmnlfita list micrht be accootable to our .R. B. Campbell, .nidan. for the sake of comparison and refer-Jamej II. Hammond, ence. Those in ilalici are Anti-Van Burcn: the William J. Grayson, HiAr.urira olectod bv the party friendly to the John K. Griffin, present Administration and opposed to the Whig Middy Thompson, jr, especially in the Wostern Slates, may taite k. j. .uannmg sides against the Van Huren party. Our object V ia not to make out a case, but to slate facts According to the evidence before us. SENATE. MAIN IS. Ether Shepley, John Ituggles. NKW HAMI'SIIIKK. Isaac Hill, Henry Hubbard. MASSACHUSETTS. Daniel Webster, John Davit. KIIODB ISLAND. Either Robbins, Jfehemiah 11. Knight. CONNECTICUT. Gideon Tomlinson, Jifalhan Smith. VBRMONT. Samuel I'rentitt, Benjamin Swift, NEW-YORK. Silas Wright, Jr., Nath'l. P. Talmage. NEW-JERSKY. Samuel L. Southard, Up-rret I). Wall. PENNSYLVANIA. James Buchanan, Samuol M' Kean.f DKI.A WAIin. Arnold Jfaudain, John M. Clayton. MARYLAND. Hob. H. Gold$borough, Joieph Kent. VIRGINIA. John Tiler, Benj. W. Leigh. NORTH-CAROLINA. Willif P. Mangnm, Bedford Brown. SOUTH-CAROLINA. William C. Prciton, John C. Calhoun. OEOROIA. Alfred Uuthbert, John P. King. KENTUCKY. Henry Clay, John J. Crittenden. TENNK88KE. Hugh I.. White, Felix Grundy. OHIO. Thomai Ewing, Thomas Morris. LOUISIANA. Alexander Porter, Charles Gayarre. INDIANA. William Hendricks,! John Tipton. Mississippi. John Black, One vacancy. ILLINOIS. Elias K. Kane, John M. Robinson. ALABAMA. Gabriel Moore. William II. King.f MISSOURI. Lewis V. Linn, Thomas II. Benton. Anti-Van Van Buret, - Doubtful, Vacancy, Hum, 25 Ruode-Mand, II) 3 . - - 1 GKOROIA. John Colfee, Hcaton Grantland, Charles E. Hayncs, Goo. W. B. Towns, Goo, W. Owens, Thomas Glascock, Jesse F. Cleveland, Hopkins Halsey, Jabez Jackson. ALABAMA. Dixon H. Lewit, Joshua L. Martin, Reuben Chapman, Joab Lawler, Francis S. Lyon. MISSISSIPPI. David Dickson, J- F. II. Claiborno.t LOUISIANA. Ilice Garland, Henry Jnckion, Gleaner W. Itiploy, TENNESSEE. John Bell, .Hiram P. Maury, Balie Peyton, Adam Huntsman, E.J. Shields, W. C. Punlap, Luke Lea, Win. B. Carter, John B. Forrester, James Standifer, Samuel Bunch, SUMMARY. Whigs, Maine, . 2 Now-IIainpshire, 0 Massachusetts, 11 Connecticut, James K. Polk, Cave Johnson. KENTUCKY. Chilton Allen, John Chambers, Wm. J. Graves, James Harlan, John White, Benj. Hardin, John Calhoun, Jos. R. Underwood, Sherrod Williams, Albert G. Hawes, Lynn lloyd, Richard French, R. AL Johnson. . MISSOURI. Wm. II. Ashley, Albert G. Harrison. ILLINOIS. Zadok Cassy, John Reynolds, Wm. L. May. INDIANA. Jonathan M'Carthy. Amos Lano, J. W. Davis, John Carr, Geo. L. Kinnard, Ewd. A. Hannegan, RatlitF Boon. OHIO. Bellamy Storer, Thomas Corwin, Wm. K. Bond, Elias Howell, Jonathan Sloane, Etisha Whittlesey, Samuel F. Vinton, Sampson Mason, Joseph II. Crane, David Spangler, William Kcnuon, John Thompson, John Chancy, Taylor Webstor, Thomas L. Harrier, Wm. Patterson, Benj. Jones, Joremiah M'Leno, David Kilgore. ARKANSAS. Ambrose II. Sevier. FLORIDA. Joseph M. While. MICIIirJAN. Isaac E. Crar.y put down any of our public men, as may suit his purpose, so may it always be. We hope never to see the State so dishonored as she would he by submitting to the intrigues, and becoming the mere tool of a foreign aspirant. Resistance to Van Buren in Pennsylvania, is now the cause of honor; for submission to his intrigues would be dishonor and disgrace. The next President The Lancaster Examiner and Herald, an influential paper of the " Democratic Anti-Masonic party " of Pennsylvania, in its last number, declares its preference for Edward Everett, of Massachusetts, and Thaddeus Stevens, of Pennsylvania, as candidates for President and Vice President of the United States, at the next election. These names will probably go with considerable strength before the State Convention of that party, which is to assemble at Harrisburg on the 14th December. Bait. Pat. From tlio Cincinnati Daily Gazette. Mr. Hammond, Enclosed is Mr. Calhoun's second letter, on the subject of the Smith Carolina rail-road. It is but justice to him lu say, lhat his first letter was written without any intimation from mo on any one rout or any notice of it, further than that such a proposition was made. As comments have been made in some papers respecting his ideas of the rout, it is but justice that those who published the first, should insert this also. Yours, respoctfully, J.XO. S. WILLIAMS. 43 Vermont, - Now-York,-Now-Jorsey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, - - Maryland,-Virginia, --North-Carolina, South-Carolina, It is to bo borne in mind that Michigan is al raadv a State, waulintr the sinp-lo act of ail in is ion into the Union, and th.it the Legislature is l.An.l ..UniAil whinli will f.linn.A line Snnalnrs ... ti.,i I ir i. ii,nr,,i,iv I Georgia, Vn llnr.i,.' Of rniip.fl thn llichisran Senators Ailb,na' ' will be of the same politics. Adding these to the list, the account will stand. Anti-Van Huren, 2 Van Buren, ...... -.-21 Doubtful, 8 Vacancy, - - - . - - - - - 1 50 Mississippi,-Louisiana, - Tonncssce, Kentucky, Missouri, Illinois, - Indiana, Ohio, 0 0 5 9 0 11 1 5 5 7 7 0 5 1 'i 11 8 1 0 1 10 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Sherman Page, William Seymour, MAINE. George Evans, Jeremiah Baily, F. O. J. Smith, Mosos Mason, Leonard Jarvis, Gorham Parks, Joseph Hall, John Fairfield. new-hampshirk. Samuel Cushman, Benning M. Boan, Franklin Pierce, Joseph Weeks, Robert Burns. Massachusetts Abbot Lawrence, . Stephen C. Phillips, Caleb Cushing, Levi Lincoln, George Grennell, George ,V. Briggs, William B. Calhoun, William Jackson, John Reed, John Quincy Adams, Samuel Hoar, Natlianiol U. Borden.f CONNECTICUT. Isaao Toucey, Samuel Ingham, F.liiha Haley, Zilmon Wildman, Andrew T. Judson, Lancelot Phelps. RHODE-ISLAND. Dutee J. Pearce, William Spraguo. VERMONT. Hitand Hall, .William Slade, Horace Everett, Hemar Allen, J. F. Janet. NEW-YORK. Hiram P. Hunt, David Russell, Francit Granger, Timothy Childt, George W. Lay, Philo C. Fuller, Akner Hatelline, Thomai C. Love, GideoA Hard, William Taylor, William K. Fuller, Ulyssei F. Douhleday Graham II. Chapin, Joshua Lee. Abol Huntington, Samuel Barton, C. C. Camhrelcng, John M'Keon, Eli Moore, Aaron Ward , Abraham Bokee, John W. Brown, Nicholas Sickles, Aaron Vanderpool, Valentine Effner. Gerrit Y. Lansing, Dudley Farlin, Ransom H.Oillet, Matthias J. Ilovee, Abijah Mann, jr., Samuel Boardslcy, Joel Turrill, Daniel Ward well, William Mason, Joseph Reynolds, Stephen B. Leonard, Gideon Leo, John Cramer. NBW-JER8EY. Philemon Dickeraon, James Parker, Samuel I' owler. AntitV.lluren, K'2 V an Huren, !.) Doubtful, 3 2ii Van Buron Doubtful. . 6 0 . 5 - -- I" . 0 .... 1 . fl .... II . 2 - 0 . 0 .... 0 .31 - - -II . fl .... (I . 17 .... (I .(,--- . 3 .... (1 . 1(1 .... 0 . 0 .... 0 .2 .... (I .9 .... II . 0 .... 0 . 0 - 1 . 1 .... II . 2 .... II . 4 -.- - 1 . 1 .... 0 . :i . . . . o . (I . . . .0 . 9 ... -0 135 3 Elertcil by the Joint vote of Antl-Masons and Jackson mon. t Doubtful. From tha Norlhirn Banner, (n Jackson and Wolf paper.) VAN BUREN IN PENNSYLVANIA. The Stato Journal, a leading and we will do Ferdinand S. Schenck, 't lllB Jt"co I" ). ' ""st talented Muhlen oerg anu vail uurmi paper in uiu oiaiu uu-clarcs its opinion iu this language, 11 ?s solemu-" ly as they believo they exist, that the leaders "of the Wolf party, and Wolf himself, arc Anti- " Van Buren mon up to the hub." V ery well. 1 hat they have every reason which the vilest and bitterest opposition to Gov. Wolf and his friends, on the part of Van Buren, could give, thero is no doubt. Could tho Editors of the Journal, or any one else, entortain the least personal respect for tho friends of Gov. Wolf, if they should now warmly espouse tho causo ol Mr. Van Huren! wo have heard ol thespanicl, which licks tho hand that chastises him; but no one would give such a charactor to tho friends of Gov. Wolf. Have they not seen Mr. Van Buren himscll, artfully decoying to his house the friends of Gov. Wolf, and there foaatiog them until they became his bitterest enemies! Have they not seen Ins partisans in tho rost Of fice Department, writing letters, and traversing the State, under pretence ol catchingmail-rob-bors, for the purpose of exciting opposition to Gov. Wolf! Have the friends of Gov. Wolf forgotten the official services of Plitt and Taylor! Do they not see the custom-house olticcn about Philadelphia, tha partisans of Van Buron, lead ing the van of the opposition to Gov. Wolfl From Van Buren down to hit lowest menial, very few can be found who are not bittor one-iniot of Gov. Wolf. And last winter when tho William N. Shiim, 1 nomas Lee. PENNSYLVANIA. James Harper, J. R. Ingersoll, Edward Darlington, David Potts, jr., William Ilcister, Matthias Morris, William Clark, George Chamheri, T. M. T. M'Kennon, Harmer Denny, John Bankt, Joel B. Sutherland, Michael W. Ash, Jacob Fry, jr., D. D. Wagenor, Edward B. Hubley, II. A. Miililenborgh, Henry Logan, Jesse Millor, Joieph Henderson, Andrew Beaumont, J. B. Anthony, John Lmporte, Job Mann, Fort Hill, Oct. I'th, llMo. Dear Sir, I havo received your two pam phlots containing the account of I lie proceed' ings at Cincinnati, in reference to tho project od rail-road between that place and Charleston, which I have road with great ploasure. The meeting takes a different view of the rout from the one which I suggested, in my letter to you. It certainly has the advantage of being mure direct, and of passing through a large tract of interesting country, which now is almost shut out from the market. Not being locally acquainted with the projected rout, I had supposed, from my general conception of the country and tho inspection of the map of tho country, that very formidable, if not insurmountable dilliculties, would have to bo encountered in crossing the mountains in that direction. 1 hope my impression is erroneous. The country certainly deserves a careful rcconnoisanco, and if a rail-road bo practicable on the rout, it has many and powerful recommendations. The road would pass through tho entiro length of this Slate, say 25'.) miles, nearly half the entire distance; and I think I may say with confidence, that if Kentucky, lennesseo, and .North Carolina, through which it would pass, and which havo a docp interest in its execution, will exc-cuto the portions which may be within their respective limits, South Carolina will meet her Western brothron on the North-western limits with a well executed rail-road to her commercial capital. But, if the difficulty should be as great on the rout as I had supposed, still the great object of uniting tho West and the Southern Atlantic ports ought not, and, I trust, will not be abandoned. Its practicability on the rout I suggested cannot bo doubtod. Since I wroto, 1 iiave acquired still further information of the country in that quarter. A e;ontloinnn well acquainted with it informs me that there is a prospect of an excellent rout direct from Athens to tho Ten nessee river, just below tho Look-out Mountain, and that the distance between the two points does not exceed 150 miles; making the distance from Charleston to that point dull miles, and of course will greatly shorten the one I suggested, and Ml more within tho scope of the project contemplated at your meeting. Should both routs provo practicable, I see no reason why ono should supersede the other. The extent of country to be accommodated, and which would have a particular interest in ono or thn other routs, gives ample scope for both. The great point is, that rivalry and conflict should nut be permitted to defeat the grand design of uniting the two sections on the oxecution of which tho prosperity of so largo a portion of the Union depends, and which is calculated to exercise such powerful and beneficent influence over the future destiny ol our country ana Us institutions. With great rospoct, I am, &c. fee. J. U. CALHOUN. J. S. Williams, Esq. another person than the President. On asking him how he could find the heart to take away the life of so venerablo as well as good and excellent a man as Gen. Jackson, he said he conceived he was doing no inoro than attacking a public robber, and talked very wildly, and with great volubility, on his royal inheritance, and his rights to the sword and bank. On ask ing hun whether ho would have shot Mr. Van Duron in the tame way, he said " certainly," if he persisted in Jackson's policy of keeping from hi in this sword and bank; but he refused to say that he would shoot Mr. Poindexter, on our pur suing out the case into the probability of his being president. Uo seemed to thiok that Mr. Poindexter, or any other opposition member, would grant him his rights, and said uniformly that the majority of the Senate aud a great part of tho House of Representatives were on his side. During all of this conversation, the evidences of insanity in Lawrence were verv apparent: the ceaseless motion and wandering direction of the eye, the excited and tremulous pulse, and a tongue thickly furred, left no doubt as to his aillnont, and there were times when his countenance assumed an expression of almost demoniacal ferocity. The Vicksduiio Trauedy. Tho Cincinnati Gazotte publishes a letter of D. W. Hui.lum, an aged Clergyman, the father of one of the five gamblers hung by the citi.ens of Vicks-burg, addressed to the Governor of Mississippi. Tho letter is an appeal to the Governor fur justice. The aged father gives a brief statement of the aflVir at Vicksburg, and affirms that thore is no part of tho United States in which the vico of gambling it so generally practiced among the olficers of the law, rom the Supreme Judge down to the Constable. His appeal for justice concludes in the following terms: " These aro startling truths, and I allude to them not to palliate the onence, but to show that the recent crusade ut Vicksburg was nut so much tho result of a deep and abiding tenso of justice and virtue, as it was of wicked hearts, bad passions, personal revenge, and a reckless spirit of insubordination to tho laws. As an evidence, ono ol the principal actora was in the constant habit of visiting gaining houses, and who had previously, by Ins seductive arts, con trihutcd, perhaps more than any other man, to lead the unfortunate victim of his personal ven geance into theso sinks of iniquity. " Enclosed are the names of sixteen persons who were ongaged in this horrid tragedy, and the names of nine witnesses of the fact, which 1 humbly trust you will forward without delay to tho Attorney General, or other officer at Vicks burg, charged with the prosecution of the do fendants. " Merinos, Circassians, etc. CIRCASSIANS; English and French Merlnon; Slialllea: French lloinrtnElnes, Bonibaaetts; Lasting and Merino Prima. For lalo by S. & 8. II. HTANTON, Dec. -I..14. No. 4, Cominerclnl Row. Shawls, etc. 0-4 SCARLET and Black Merino Shawls; Kmbroiilcrrd Sliul-rasa, Thibet and Slmlly Do.; Merino, Thibet, lluuana, Crape, and Fancy Silk Handkerchief!. For aale by S. & S. B. PTANTOV, Dec. 4. .14. No. 4, Cnininerciul lluw. Miss Leslie's Pencil Sketches, 1st Scries, JUST rcrelved and for mle by MONnoR BKI.I,. Dec. 4. New Novels. WILL Watch, In 3 vol.; Normnn Loalie, in 2 vol. The llawka of Hawk Hollow, 2 vole.; Port Admiral. 3 roll. Paulding'! Letters from the South. Juat received by Dec. 4. MOXROK BELL. Malting and Brewing Establishment. A fine ononrtunltv now preaenla luelf to any ncraon diapoaed to purchnae or rent tan only ertaliliahed Brewery in the lown of tlrclcvlllc. TUB prenuaoa nmy ue aeen anu luimvi I'muium,. known, by an enrly call upon tlieaubacriber. Nov.27.-14:t C'ir. . junm ,-viur.r.c. Franklin Hank Notice! . thr ftnminl election for Director! of the Friiukllii Hank of Co luiubuB, will bo held at tin Banking bouso between the buura of 10, A. M. und 1, P. M. on the Ural .Monday oi jnnunry ncn. By order of tho Hoard. J. M. ESl'Y, Caali'r, Nov. 47 HOUSES, LANDS, ETC. City Property on High-street. THE itiliBcridon oiTer for iale the following raluablt property mm o ted on the Wound, viz: Lot No, 2J1 ilio, th undivided Imlf of Loti No. 358, 35'.. ml WO. If not prcvloml dlnj"iud of, will tt olTarod at public Ml tb 17(li dfiy of f)cc mlr next, Oct. ?. bf HtJRR, CRKCOnY tX CO. Town Property for Sale. THE siihicrJljcr will icll, on a short credit, and nt a low pric, Lot No. 11 in John M'Klvaln'i nddlilon to tho Town of Colum-bin, diroctly opposite lo Joseph Hunter't Steam gaw-mill. Tha home on said Lot u 48 by 15 fuel, one ilory lit?h, with a cellar under it 30 by 15 feci, and walled with stone in tho beat nienner. Also part of block No. 3 tn the Town of Houth Columbue, fronting on Front ptrcct 84j feet, ond on Public Lane 100 f'J nut kins a Lot 100 by 8Jj feet. The bullae on aald Lot ie 36 by 111 feet, l atory liitfli. with n good cellar undur it. The nhovc muncd houses are both well finiibcd and nearly new. folumbiM Nov. 27.-13 tf. AMOS BIXHV, 13..U4 New Roisters and Pillows, LARGE and well filled, for aaloatlbe iioreof Dec. 4.. 14 1 uiim Fish. THREE hundred till, while liali, 50 barrel! Lake llcrrin( KHI half barrel! do do 20 do trout. 200 barroli iiickercl do All freah.nnd lor aale by M'EI.VAIN, HUNTER & CO., Franklin llulldingi Nov. 27 BrondH. Sugar and Melassos. Tivtm vive bblrt. . O. auuar I 30 burrcla tnetnaac! 20 do. country do. lorenlcoy Nov.27..1 t M'EI.VAIN, lll.M Klleln'. Bran and Shorts. TWO IIIJNI1RED buabcll of tho above artlrlci, for lals by Nov. 27-.13 M'ELVAIX, 1I1JNTKK S CO. Cigars and Tobacco. 400 noxrl melee cljan I 30 kcia Ciiaoy'i No. 1 and 2 12.000 Soaniih do. loliarco. All juat received, and for lalo.at lowest prlcci.bv M'ELVAIN, HUNTER & CO. Nov. 27. Franklin Iluildlnji, Ilrond at., near tin llrltljn. FOR lalo by louses, Lots and Land, r. II. OI.MSTEI). Nov. 27. 20 Kegs Spiced Oysters, JUST received and for lale by J. P. & VV. DROOKS. Nov 20 12 FOR aale by Pure Cider Vinegar 1. P. b W I1ROOKH. Nov. 20-12 Nathan need J vs. lit Partition, The other hciri of Nathan Rcod. dee'd. S IN purauance of nn order from the Court of Common Pleea of Flrkaway county, Ohio, In tbii cnae, I ilinll offer for eal! 10 tb hlckMt l.fdrfor, ut the door of the Court-House tn Clrclevlltf, in aaiclcountyof Pickaway, on tho 15f!tay of Dteembsr next, th rnllowine-rfoarritiRtt innd, to wit: 200 acree on Mill Creek, In lb. comity ol Union, Ohio, being the north half of a 400 acre entry, No.o219: nlao, lola Nob. 11, 13 and Id, in the fourth quarter of the cizlilh townahip in the sixteenth range of tho United Slates Military Inude, lylne; in the county of Dolnware, In aald Blate, oiicb containing 100 acres; alao, 444 ncrea lying In the county of IMcknway nforeaaid, on tho watori of Deer Creek, No. of eurvey, 62112. A. L. PERKILL, Nov. 13 11 t15d Sheriff of Pickaway county. - The Ohio Slate Journal will publlahllll the day of aale, and forward their account lo this efficc. Cirrlmillt Herald. Valuable Land for Sale. THE auhacrlhor offer! for lalo tho following tract! of land, lo wit: 417 acre! on Wolf Creek, llurdin county; there is on tha premises a good Saw Mill, which cuta from 2000 to 2500 feet In 24 hours. 50 acres elenred smooth, liua four miles tolow Kenton, and near the rout surveyed or the Lake Erie and Mad river Rail Rnad. l.'iOacrca nenr Round Head, on the Scioto river, Hardin county 8.MI acrea on Rush Creak, Union county, No. of survey, 9917. lor terma, fee. annlyto M. II. Kirby, Esq., In Columhua.nrta the aubsrrlher, near Kcnlon, Ohio. R. T. MADISON. Oct. 30-9 tf Land for Sale. ' THE subscriber oilers for sale, 1300 acres of land in tho Darby I'laina, Madison county, about four miles west of Fuller'! mill. No. of lurvey, 7791. The whole under good fence: two small tenements on the land; constant wnler on the premises. Any person withlng tn eiigrigo In tho stock hualncis, will And tilt above premises desirnbly situated for the business. Fur terms, &'. apply lo M. II. Klrby, Ftq., In Columbul, or lo Cbarlea Arthur, nu ibe land. PLEASANT ARTHUR, Ocl. 309 tf. Highland County. Pew for Sale IN the Presbyterian Church, adv uitngeoualy eituated. Inquire) at the Journal office. Sept. 25 Klingensinitli, jr., Andrew llticlianan, Samuel S. Harrison, John Gnlbraith. DELAWARE. John J. Milligan. MARYLAND Jamet Turner, Daniel Jennifer, Geo. C. Washington, John Jr. Steele, Jamet A. Pearce, Isaao M'Kim, Donj. C. Howard, f rancit 1 homas. VIROIMIA. John Robertson, John Talliaferro, Charlet F. Mercer, William .VComru, Mith'l. II. Claiborne, Honrf A. Wise, George Loyall, John Y. Mason, J. Roane. John M. Patton, Geo. K. Dromgoole, John W. Jone, Thomas T. U. Hotildin, Waller Coles, James Garland, F.dirard Lucas, Jamci M. II. Bealo, ltoliert Craifr,. G. W. Hopkins, Joseph Johnson, Wm. S. Morgan. NORTH-CAROLINA I Ebenezcr Pettigrew, From the Georgetown (D. C.) Metropolitan. Lawrhnck. Through the kindness of a medical friend, we had an opportunity afforded us lately to pay a visit to the all but too celebrated Lawrence. This individual, who had to nearly attained in our annals tho rank of a Ita-vaillac. or a Fellon, is, as is well known, con fined in tho jail of Washington, in default of suitable accomodation in the District lor luna tics. Now that tho apprehensions which ho may be fairly presumed to have entertained with regard to hit trial must have subsided, and when tho atrocitv of his attempt had lost Die wild novel tv of oxcitcmout, and ordinary foelings might havo been supposed to have resumed their sway, wo foil tho greatest interest lo Know, mini per sonal observation, how far a peculiar idiosyn cracy might have contributed incitement to the tromcnuotis accu wuu wim u no is lurnuucu. We found Lawronce tilling bofore tho tlovc in the room which ho occupies in common with that Crandall. who has to thank tho jail for an escape from Lynching, and another. He is a short lliick-sel man, with an cxtorior by no means unprepossessing. Al li rat his convorsa expression of tho democracy of the State was j tion had nothing at all indicating insanity, lie Caution. As the cold weathor approaches and large fires are necessary for comfort, it is the duly of parents lo change tho inflammable cotton summer garments of their children, for tho lest combustible material ol woolen, in or dor to guard against the sad accidents, which we regret to say, not unfrequently happen every rear, especially at the commencement ol winter. Thcro cannot be a fato moro dreadful, either to a child or an adult, than that of being burned to death; and as shocking instances have occurred not only to children, but lo females, we cannot but advert to the discovery of diehard Phillips, published some time since in an Ktiglish periodical, fur their provonlion. H illiir.ad from tho principle of tho ascension of flame, that ladies ought to lio down so soon n they discover their clothes to be on fire, that tho prog-rest of tho flame will by that means be instantly checked, and may ho easily extinguished, with out anv fatal injury, as usual, to the head, the face, bosom or tliroat. He proved his principle bv the following experiment: he took two slips of printed cotton, a yard long, and on lighting ono of them at the lower end, holding it perpen dicular, it was consumed to a cinder in a fifth of a minute, and tho volume of name was so great as to rise two feet. He then lighted an exactly similar piece of cotton and laid it horizontally on a nair of toners, so as to bo hollow, and in this situation it was five minutes burning, and the flames at no ono time ascended an inch in height and might have been extinguished by the thumb or finger. This plain and easy experiment ought to bo read in tho presenco of the females of every family. Uoston .iter. wuti. "All Eiieeuee at the risk of the owner.1' To lest tho nporution of litis advertisement, so com mon on the part of public carriers, two suits were lately instituted ngnmst the uamacn ana Amuoy Rail-road Uompanv. isotn cases resulted in vor. diets with ample damages for the Plaintiffs. On the 18th ult. tliocaso of Belknap against the above Company wus tried in the Supreme Court beforo Chief Justico Jones. I he lollowing re. port of tho cass is from tho Commercial Advor tisor: It was iirced on tho nart of tho defendants lhat tho missing proporty, a trunk, was merely placed in the oilice, while tho plainlilf waspaying-his faro as a passenger: tho advertisement announcing that the company would not be an werahln, cVc. was road in Court. It was.con lotuled for tho plaintiff, that although tho do fendants did give notice that they refused to ba responsible for tho loss of proporty falling into their possession in tho regular coiirso of their bimncss, yet it availed mem nothing, anu they weio liable for tho loss or destruction, under such circumstances, of any property bo l.iniriiirr to other persons. In his charge to the jury, the loarned Judge coincided with the ar minienla o t 10 n Iu nllll counsel. eiruiiii u cordingly for tho plaintiff. Damages $:U)fl Butter. 20 keffs butter, 10 jars do. November 20. for inle by J. P. it W. D1100K9. 12 Ciissimcres. A FINK naaortment of buckskin, ribbed and fancy alriped tnssl-meres, Just received and for sale by . & P. n. STANTON', Nov.20--12 N'o. dConitnerrlal Row. Dye StulTs. INDIGO, madder, ground log and nle woods, for enlo by 8. 4 8. n. 8TANT0X, Nov. 20. .12. No. 4 Commercial Row. The Comic, German and English Almanac for 1036. for sale by P. II. OLMSTED. Nov. 20.12 Stoves and Hollow Wruf, AT furnace prices, for l ile by S. W. & J. E. PA l.MEtl, Nov. 20.. 12 No. 3, Exchange llulldinsa, Broad-It. Warranted Cast Steel Axes, ROCHESTER make, for aale by S. W. (t J. E. PALMER, Nov. 20-. 12 No. 3, ExchaiiL'C lluildinca, Hrond-at. Block Tin, Sheet Iron, Copper, &c, TIN 1-3 X, Mock tin, fliontlilnj copi-cr. do. tinned, EnjiHilmnd Rum In il.cet Iron for nle ly i. w. tn J. vaiik. Nor. 20.. 12 N Kiciianao uumnnRH, uroan n HKH) fect Lead 1'ipe, ASSORTED bores, for lale by S. W. 4 J. E. PALMEIl, Nov. 20.. 12 No. 3, Exchange llutldlnua, llrond-at. Dry Goods. jVo. 8 and 10 Exchange Buildings. THREE HUNDRED packagea Dry Good!, enmprlalng very xtenalva assortment rocclvod and altered at wholesale and retail allow prices by CHA Jiriun s 1 ur. Nov. 20. .12 - two to one in favor of Gov. Wolf, have they not seen the members of Congress, tho partisans of Van Huren in Pennsylvania, holding a meeting and entoring into an absolute conspiracy to divide tho parly, for the purpose of defeating Gov. Woll, and indirectly enacting me eiocuoa 01 Ritnerl What Democrat would submit to such vile intriguesl We can tell the partisans of Mr. Van Uuren that wheo the peoplo of I'onn-sylvania aro so fallen, they will no longe. ba ca pable or maintaining tneir itoerty, anu win oe prepared to receive tho yoke of any foreign usurper who may choose to put it upon them; and that they have intelligence enough to see this, and havo spirit enough to resist it. Never will Pennsylvania suffer herself to become a mero tool in the hands ol political gamuiors, to be shuflled about to suit their purposes. Rot if the leaders of tho Wolf party aro op posed to Van Uuren, as tho Journal lolomnly assorts its belief, prav what are bis prospects in Pennsylvania! The opposition to Van Huron, as indicated by Ilitnor'i vote, is H4,IUHI strong. Now if tho Wolf party really are, as tho Journal savs. of a similar cast, so far as Van Huron is concerned, it is evident from the calculation of bis own friends, that the Macician'i wand has been moved upon Pennsylvania in vain. Thii is the calculation of the leading and most tal onted Van I) 11 re n Journal in tho .Stale. It car ries cold comfort to Mr. Van Huren and his friends. When a foreign aspirant endeavors to plant his standard in our Stale, by interfering io our local politics, and attempts to put up or spoko of his confinement, of his health, appetite, fiC in a manner perfectly natural and appro priate, and the conversation wandored oil into a variety of subjects, on all of which he deliver ed himself willi ease and volubility, his counte nance ovidoncing all tho while, as far as physiognomy afforded a clue, a degroe of openness and candor which we would scarcely havo expected. It was not until, as it were, by an accidental coutingoncy of the conversation, that the bank was mentioned, that the diseased chord in his mind was touchod. Once, however, woke, it jarred the whole system. He ontared into the subject with great oagerness, and detailed at length hit intentions and plans for killing the President. Among other rcmaruaDlo instan ces, if we might so spoaK 01 mat niciuity 01 cunning, by which madmen aro Known to carry out their schemes, ho stated thai lie reserved nis fire at tho President until he felt suro from his position lhat the ball after passing through him would not kill another ho expressed great sorrow for the failuro of his attempt, and said lhat tho powder had boon abstracted from tho pistol tho night boforo by ono of his follow boarders that when he saw the President coming, ho had the presenco of mind," wo quoto his own words, " to look into the moulli of tho pistols to see that all was right, and observing the balls, concluded that It was so." It may hero be mentioned, as an evidence of Lawrence's gon-eral humanity, that be said, on tho question bo- ing put to hun, that he would rather have giv Webster's Speeches, etc. lt!ST received at the Store of Monroe Bell, Webltor'a Snoerhea, coiiinlele in 2 vole. I Bryant'! Poems ; Mrs. Sigourney I Praams; Pope'e Pocmi, complete in i vol ; i.niuainiui rc,., m. Mnrklntnab's lllatorv of the Revolution In England In l(5i!8, 1 vol Mnahslm'l Church lllalory, 2 voli.l Large 410 Alhuma, &e. ccf All of which will be Mid al tha loweit ptlcea. Pk. 4. Eherle's Practice New Edition. 4. Treatiie on lbs Practice of Medicine: By John Eberle, M. I) o.n'sBvn. Third edition, reviled and enlarged. Just pub lished, aud for sal! by ISAAC N. WHITI.SO. Doc. 4. Cheap JJuildinf: Lots. STARLING k CILIIERT offer for aals Twenty Loll, beautifully aituatcd opposito the lluirh College. For terms, whieh will be nmtlc oaay, itinulro at llielr Office on Siigor otloy, Aug. 2fi.-lf For Sale, at a bargain. TWO amnll and convenient HOUSES, with a half lot attached to each, on lot .'o. 771, Rich-street. Inquire of August 211 If BTARLIN'O A OILnERT. To Let, TUP. second, third and fourth stories in No. 1 , Broadway Ex change Buildings. Apply to W. II. RICHARDS Valuable Property for Sale, IS the city of Columbus, Ohio. 120 In Lols 624 by 1871 feet. dU Out-Lota 2t acres each. These Lots are well and pleasantly situated; and v-lll bo sold by the single lot, or the whole, ae may suit Ibe purchaser. O. at B. CROSBY. August 4. 11135. GO Doctor James Irons RESPECTFULLY tender! his professional service! to the cltl-sens of Columbus and the sunnundlng country; and hopee, hy strict attention to business, to sliate a part of public patronage. Hie OfTire U on Mnrkct-sircct, in the House recently occcnpleil bv Mr. Warren Jonkliis, and opposite the residence of Colonel Olmsted. Nov. 6 10 Albany Planes, FOR SALE II V S. W. tt i. E. PALMER, Nov. 20. .1? No- 3, Exchange Rullillues. Urond St. Carpeting. FINE, Superfine and Extra Superfine Ingrain Cirpollngi. I J and 4-4 Venlllan Carpeting, a handsome assortment just received and for sale by CHAMPION & LATIIItol', Nov. 20. .12 o tu ma.j "'""" Broad Cloths. Cassnneres, fcattincts and Vcatinga, a line assortment of qualilra and rolnre for lale low ly CHAMPION t LATIIROP, 12 No. B and 10 Broadway urnanae. Nov. 50. Silks. m.K.Grol de Nape, Groi de mvwa, uros nc nuine; a anu a , Italian, Synsbew and Snrslnell; plain and figured, eol'd, and black Gros de Nop., a full asaorlmen: for anlo by lllAMrii'.i ol i. Allium-, Nov. 20.. 12 N'- 8 4,,d 10 Broadway Exchange. New Establishment. fl. (k fl. I). STANTON have Inken the Store No. 4, Commercial Row, next door below A. P. Stone, whore they havo Justr-celvi-d and they are new opening n general aeaortment of FALL AND WINTER 8TAFI.R AND FANCY DRY OOODS; Hate, Cnpa, Boola, Shod, Hardware mid Grocerlei; which they offer Wbolcanle and Retail on ll-.n moat rcaeonahle terma, for caih, or In exchnncefor Country Produco. Oct, 309 7v Pistols, Dirks, Knives, &c. JUST received at the City Auction Store, a large nuanllly of rocket Pislota, and fine Dirkl, Dirk Knlvc!, e. etc. Oct. 309 tf 20 dozen Axes. JI'ST received. SO doa. Caat Steel Axel, of a superior quality madeexpreaaly fur thla market, for aale by the doun oraingle, by Oct. 311 - Wl LI.IAM M. KABSON. Superior Teas, RECENTLY Imported by the ihlpaCynthla. Ilermlei, Coll-euaa. and Sachem, among which aro Imperial, Gunpowder, Old llyaon and Young Hyaon. Juit received and for lale very low at the ProvUion and Family Grocery of Oct. 2J-B J. P. - W. BROOKB. Cotlec. rORTO RICO, Rio and Java Coffee, all of the belt quality, for sale hy J. P & W. BROOKS. Ocl. -l Mcrinoes. FRENCH and Engllah Slerlnoes, a great variety of nullities and colors, for sole by CHAMPION J; i.atmkiii-. Nov. 20.. 1 3 No. 8 and 10 llronuway r.xrnnnge. Taper. THREE HUNDRED reams letter, cap. and wrapping. Two bales paper hangings, for aale low hy CHAMPION fc I.ATHROP, Nov. 50. .12 No. H and 10 Broadway Exchange. Nijiars. LOAF and Lump augar, New Orieaaa (a luperlor article.) anfl SI . Crnl i , for aa lo by J. P. IV. B R IOKB. Oct. 23 8 Shoes. FIFTY enaei hoots and iboes, comprising a large variety ol gentlemen'! and ladle!', for inle law, hy curtail nirt re i... i "iwi , Nov. 20-.12 No. 8 and 10 Rroadway Exchange. . . -k, .- I IT I, Uent einen's riain and junncn lianio si WOOL and merino shirts and drawers. Ladies, merino rests and drawer!, for lale by CHAMPION ti I.ATHROP, Nov. 20- 12 "ni1 10 "roadway Exchange. Monroe Bell HAS litis dav received alarge and I'eanllfnl assortment of Wsi.t. Pra and Doaoaaiao, consisting of near 2000 piercsWall Paper and 500 Bordering, whleh he will sell nt a small advance on Enstern cost. Jf rtrtTk BUSHELS OP WHEAT! November 20. New Music Book. THE Western Mlnalrel, or Ohio Melodiat ! eontnlning a choice collection of Moral, Palrlotle and Sentimental Songs, with tho appropriate Millie, for each plnre In Patent Notes, carefully se lected and amxeil thereto; logeiuer wuu inairucnuii. era. Being woll calculated lo give a correct knowledge of Vocal Music ; and also designed in assist learners oi me imuaaamai Branch of that Science. For aale bylhodoaen or elude copy hy I)(,c.4. ISAAC N. WHITING. Boots and Shoes. JUST received, 20 ensei first quality bonti and ihoes, by Nov 13. S. it S. B. STANTON, No. 4. Commercial Row. Salt. 100 his. Zaneaville Salt, for sale by . Nov. 13..tf fl. A 8. n. STANTON, No. 4, Cominerclnl Bow. Notice. il.l. Indebted tn thn late drill ofOmsTt a & Sr. Ci.aia mm hat nil unsettled acconiita and notea due aald Arm on the let day of Jnnunry, 1036. will ho placed In the hand! of proper nfHrnri for collodion, without ra.pecl to persona; and all persona Indebted to the auhacrlhor for more than ill months, are rcuurstcd to call and settle Immediately. Columbus, Nov. 27-13 P. II. OLMSTED, en up his rights than gained them by killing reiurohui, Feb. 10. 1W3. Save your Ashes! g g af.), lll'SIIELS OF ASHES wanted by ibe 1 (?(lf!.F subscriber, at the Soap and Candle Manufactory at the west end of the Bridge. r.. ii. iia..."i.,. 23 tf Streeter's Ily.itns, FOR inle hythe docen or aingle copy, al the nnnktdnrenf Ocl 23 R MONROE BELL. Prime Orleans Suar and CoiTee. FOR aale. by the harrrel and hag. by L. M'CUI. LOUGH, Ocl. Hi. 7 3m On'"" " "' City House, R Y MRS. ROBINSON et SON, High Ural J ft rJi ( of lea S'aU-ltomt, Cot.rMni-s, Onto. Wines. 11 MT Madeira Wine, from ti l Vintage of 1A25 Superior Canary do " do 1H27 Rarrlay's best Tort do ' " do 11 1630 Dry Malaga do. Persons desirous of purchasing unadulterated wines srl roe-pertfully Invllod to call. J. V. It W. BROOKS. Oct. 2.18 Fish. 10 Quintals end Fish, the best. aver brought to this market. Also, Mackerel, Shad and Salmon, Jusl received and for sale by Oct. 2.1-8 J. P. - W. BROOKS. Wanted, for which I will pay the highest pries In CASH, al my mil!, nne milo xveit of Columbus. Jan. 18.-28 tf WM. fl. SL'I.HVAST, Mill Stones ! Cheap fir Cash or good Lumber. A FEW palnof Itiirnon Burr Mill Slonci, warranted to bo flnt quality of tlio following aires: 3, 3J, and 4 feet for sale by Cnluinl.iia, .Mayail-fal lf W. A. GILL ft CO. Removal. pTsni.itm Ic Gtt.BKBT have removed their Law Offiea tha building on Sugar allry nrcupicd by Col. Lyne Starllng.and op posite the house of M. Northmp, Esq. Juno 2), 1835. a Rags Wanted. ISAAC N. WHITING continues to pay the litgheit prises tot Rags, either In Ctsh or trade. May 30, 1835 50 To Country Merchants &. Booksellers, WEBSTER'S r.lemcntary Spelling Book, for sals by the sua, scrlhor, tn Culunihus TTRAGS will be taken in exebange for any quantity. July 31. 5!) C. SCOTT. Health Secured ! BY the IIVOEIAN VEGETABLE MEDICINES preparadby Ibe British College of lleallh for sale, on commission, hy Muylfi,.48 STEWART It OSIIORN. Hopkins' (Jenuine Razor Strop. A supply of (lie above article Juat received and for sale by Oct. ill.l5.-5 I'. H. OLMSTED. Apprentice AV anted TO the Silveramithlng bnalni-aa. A s narl boy, of good hahlla 15 or lb yean Ol ago. rne iruin um counu, " " , red. November !J. A. PLATT, If A New Law Book. CRIMINAL EVIDENCE. The auhaerlbera have In press, and will reprint wllf-uut ilelsv, "A Dli-est of tho Law of Evidenca in Criminal Caare. Bv Henry Roscoe, Esq. of the Inner Ten), pie, Barrister at Law." P. IT. Nicklin it T. Johnson, Kept. 1 I..W Bookrellers. 175 Cfeinut-at. PhlMclh1

ah FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1835. PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY SCOTT & WRIGHT. No. 1G, Vol. XXV Whole No. 147. JOURNAL AND SENTINEL. Edmund Deberry, P. C. aALLAGHEIt, EDITOR. Office on lligh-'treel, lecond door louth of Armstrong'! Hotel. TRRMST,vo Dollar! and Fifty Cent!, ia odeums, or Three Dollar!, al the ond of the yoor. No lubicriber allowed to dll-continue while he remain! Indebted to the office. .iitguitine H. Shepard, Abraham llencher, James Graham, Lewis Williams, Wm. B. Shepard, Jesse Speight, Micajah T. Hawkins, J. A. Bvntim, Wm. Monlgomery, James M'Kay, Henry W. Connor. SOUTH-CAROLINA From the New. York Journnl of Commirce. LIST OK MEMBERS ELECTED TO THETWEN-TY-FOURTH CONGRESS. As the Senate is now full, with the exception of Henry L. Pinckney, na member from Mississippi, we have thought f. W. Pickens, . nnmnlfita list micrht be accootable to our .R. B. Campbell, .nidan. for the sake of comparison and refer-Jamej II. Hammond, ence. Those in ilalici are Anti-Van Burcn: the William J. Grayson, HiAr.urira olectod bv the party friendly to the John K. Griffin, present Administration and opposed to the Whig Middy Thompson, jr, especially in the Wostern Slates, may taite k. j. .uannmg sides against the Van Huren party. Our object V ia not to make out a case, but to slate facts According to the evidence before us. SENATE. MAIN IS. Ether Shepley, John Ituggles. NKW HAMI'SIIIKK. Isaac Hill, Henry Hubbard. MASSACHUSETTS. Daniel Webster, John Davit. KIIODB ISLAND. Either Robbins, Jfehemiah 11. Knight. CONNECTICUT. Gideon Tomlinson, Jifalhan Smith. VBRMONT. Samuel I'rentitt, Benjamin Swift, NEW-YORK. Silas Wright, Jr., Nath'l. P. Talmage. NEW-JERSKY. Samuel L. Southard, Up-rret I). Wall. PENNSYLVANIA. James Buchanan, Samuol M' Kean.f DKI.A WAIin. Arnold Jfaudain, John M. Clayton. MARYLAND. Hob. H. Gold$borough, Joieph Kent. VIRGINIA. John Tiler, Benj. W. Leigh. NORTH-CAROLINA. Willif P. Mangnm, Bedford Brown. SOUTH-CAROLINA. William C. Prciton, John C. Calhoun. OEOROIA. Alfred Uuthbert, John P. King. KENTUCKY. Henry Clay, John J. Crittenden. TENNK88KE. Hugh I.. White, Felix Grundy. OHIO. Thomai Ewing, Thomas Morris. LOUISIANA. Alexander Porter, Charles Gayarre. INDIANA. William Hendricks,! John Tipton. Mississippi. John Black, One vacancy. ILLINOIS. Elias K. Kane, John M. Robinson. ALABAMA. Gabriel Moore. William II. King.f MISSOURI. Lewis V. Linn, Thomas II. Benton. Anti-Van Van Buret, - Doubtful, Vacancy, Hum, 25 Ruode-Mand, II) 3 . - - 1 GKOROIA. John Colfee, Hcaton Grantland, Charles E. Hayncs, Goo. W. B. Towns, Goo, W. Owens, Thomas Glascock, Jesse F. Cleveland, Hopkins Halsey, Jabez Jackson. ALABAMA. Dixon H. Lewit, Joshua L. Martin, Reuben Chapman, Joab Lawler, Francis S. Lyon. MISSISSIPPI. David Dickson, J- F. II. Claiborno.t LOUISIANA. Ilice Garland, Henry Jnckion, Gleaner W. Itiploy, TENNESSEE. John Bell, .Hiram P. Maury, Balie Peyton, Adam Huntsman, E.J. Shields, W. C. Punlap, Luke Lea, Win. B. Carter, John B. Forrester, James Standifer, Samuel Bunch, SUMMARY. Whigs, Maine, . 2 Now-IIainpshire, 0 Massachusetts, 11 Connecticut, James K. Polk, Cave Johnson. KENTUCKY. Chilton Allen, John Chambers, Wm. J. Graves, James Harlan, John White, Benj. Hardin, John Calhoun, Jos. R. Underwood, Sherrod Williams, Albert G. Hawes, Lynn lloyd, Richard French, R. AL Johnson. . MISSOURI. Wm. II. Ashley, Albert G. Harrison. ILLINOIS. Zadok Cassy, John Reynolds, Wm. L. May. INDIANA. Jonathan M'Carthy. Amos Lano, J. W. Davis, John Carr, Geo. L. Kinnard, Ewd. A. Hannegan, RatlitF Boon. OHIO. Bellamy Storer, Thomas Corwin, Wm. K. Bond, Elias Howell, Jonathan Sloane, Etisha Whittlesey, Samuel F. Vinton, Sampson Mason, Joseph II. Crane, David Spangler, William Kcnuon, John Thompson, John Chancy, Taylor Webstor, Thomas L. Harrier, Wm. Patterson, Benj. Jones, Joremiah M'Leno, David Kilgore. ARKANSAS. Ambrose II. Sevier. FLORIDA. Joseph M. While. MICIIirJAN. Isaac E. Crar.y put down any of our public men, as may suit his purpose, so may it always be. We hope never to see the State so dishonored as she would he by submitting to the intrigues, and becoming the mere tool of a foreign aspirant. Resistance to Van Buren in Pennsylvania, is now the cause of honor; for submission to his intrigues would be dishonor and disgrace. The next President The Lancaster Examiner and Herald, an influential paper of the " Democratic Anti-Masonic party " of Pennsylvania, in its last number, declares its preference for Edward Everett, of Massachusetts, and Thaddeus Stevens, of Pennsylvania, as candidates for President and Vice President of the United States, at the next election. These names will probably go with considerable strength before the State Convention of that party, which is to assemble at Harrisburg on the 14th December. Bait. Pat. From tlio Cincinnati Daily Gazette. Mr. Hammond, Enclosed is Mr. Calhoun's second letter, on the subject of the Smith Carolina rail-road. It is but justice to him lu say, lhat his first letter was written without any intimation from mo on any one rout or any notice of it, further than that such a proposition was made. As comments have been made in some papers respecting his ideas of the rout, it is but justice that those who published the first, should insert this also. Yours, respoctfully, J.XO. S. WILLIAMS. 43 Vermont, - Now-York,-Now-Jorsey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, - - Maryland,-Virginia, --North-Carolina, South-Carolina, It is to bo borne in mind that Michigan is al raadv a State, waulintr the sinp-lo act of ail in is ion into the Union, and th.it the Legislature is l.An.l ..UniAil whinli will f.linn.A line Snnalnrs ... ti.,i I ir i. ii,nr,,i,iv I Georgia, Vn llnr.i,.' Of rniip.fl thn llichisran Senators Ailb,na' ' will be of the same politics. Adding these to the list, the account will stand. Anti-Van Huren, 2 Van Buren, ...... -.-21 Doubtful, 8 Vacancy, - - - . - - - - - 1 50 Mississippi,-Louisiana, - Tonncssce, Kentucky, Missouri, Illinois, - Indiana, Ohio, 0 0 5 9 0 11 1 5 5 7 7 0 5 1 'i 11 8 1 0 1 10 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Sherman Page, William Seymour, MAINE. George Evans, Jeremiah Baily, F. O. J. Smith, Mosos Mason, Leonard Jarvis, Gorham Parks, Joseph Hall, John Fairfield. new-hampshirk. Samuel Cushman, Benning M. Boan, Franklin Pierce, Joseph Weeks, Robert Burns. Massachusetts Abbot Lawrence, . Stephen C. Phillips, Caleb Cushing, Levi Lincoln, George Grennell, George ,V. Briggs, William B. Calhoun, William Jackson, John Reed, John Quincy Adams, Samuel Hoar, Natlianiol U. Borden.f CONNECTICUT. Isaao Toucey, Samuel Ingham, F.liiha Haley, Zilmon Wildman, Andrew T. Judson, Lancelot Phelps. RHODE-ISLAND. Dutee J. Pearce, William Spraguo. VERMONT. Hitand Hall, .William Slade, Horace Everett, Hemar Allen, J. F. Janet. NEW-YORK. Hiram P. Hunt, David Russell, Francit Granger, Timothy Childt, George W. Lay, Philo C. Fuller, Akner Hatelline, Thomai C. Love, GideoA Hard, William Taylor, William K. Fuller, Ulyssei F. Douhleday Graham II. Chapin, Joshua Lee. Abol Huntington, Samuel Barton, C. C. Camhrelcng, John M'Keon, Eli Moore, Aaron Ward , Abraham Bokee, John W. Brown, Nicholas Sickles, Aaron Vanderpool, Valentine Effner. Gerrit Y. Lansing, Dudley Farlin, Ransom H.Oillet, Matthias J. Ilovee, Abijah Mann, jr., Samuel Boardslcy, Joel Turrill, Daniel Ward well, William Mason, Joseph Reynolds, Stephen B. Leonard, Gideon Leo, John Cramer. NBW-JER8EY. Philemon Dickeraon, James Parker, Samuel I' owler. AntitV.lluren, K'2 V an Huren, !.) Doubtful, 3 2ii Van Buron Doubtful. . 6 0 . 5 - -- I" . 0 .... 1 . fl .... II . 2 - 0 . 0 .... 0 .31 - - -II . fl .... (I . 17 .... (I .(,--- . 3 .... (1 . 1(1 .... 0 . 0 .... 0 .2 .... (I .9 .... II . 0 .... 0 . 0 - 1 . 1 .... II . 2 .... II . 4 -.- - 1 . 1 .... 0 . :i . . . . o . (I . . . .0 . 9 ... -0 135 3 Elertcil by the Joint vote of Antl-Masons and Jackson mon. t Doubtful. From tha Norlhirn Banner, (n Jackson and Wolf paper.) VAN BUREN IN PENNSYLVANIA. The Stato Journal, a leading and we will do Ferdinand S. Schenck, 't lllB Jt"co I" ). ' ""st talented Muhlen oerg anu vail uurmi paper in uiu oiaiu uu-clarcs its opinion iu this language, 11 ?s solemu-" ly as they believo they exist, that the leaders "of the Wolf party, and Wolf himself, arc Anti- " Van Buren mon up to the hub." V ery well. 1 hat they have every reason which the vilest and bitterest opposition to Gov. Wolf and his friends, on the part of Van Buren, could give, thero is no doubt. Could tho Editors of the Journal, or any one else, entortain the least personal respect for tho friends of Gov. Wolf, if they should now warmly espouse tho causo ol Mr. Van Huren! wo have heard ol thespanicl, which licks tho hand that chastises him; but no one would give such a charactor to tho friends of Gov. Wolf. Have they not seen Mr. Van Buren himscll, artfully decoying to his house the friends of Gov. Wolf, and there foaatiog them until they became his bitterest enemies! Have they not seen Ins partisans in tho rost Of fice Department, writing letters, and traversing the State, under pretence ol catchingmail-rob-bors, for the purpose of exciting opposition to Gov. Wolf! Have the friends of Gov. Wolf forgotten the official services of Plitt and Taylor! Do they not see the custom-house olticcn about Philadelphia, tha partisans of Van Buron, lead ing the van of the opposition to Gov. Wolfl From Van Buren down to hit lowest menial, very few can be found who are not bittor one-iniot of Gov. Wolf. And last winter when tho William N. Shiim, 1 nomas Lee. PENNSYLVANIA. James Harper, J. R. Ingersoll, Edward Darlington, David Potts, jr., William Ilcister, Matthias Morris, William Clark, George Chamheri, T. M. T. M'Kennon, Harmer Denny, John Bankt, Joel B. Sutherland, Michael W. Ash, Jacob Fry, jr., D. D. Wagenor, Edward B. Hubley, II. A. Miililenborgh, Henry Logan, Jesse Millor, Joieph Henderson, Andrew Beaumont, J. B. Anthony, John Lmporte, Job Mann, Fort Hill, Oct. I'th, llMo. Dear Sir, I havo received your two pam phlots containing the account of I lie proceed' ings at Cincinnati, in reference to tho project od rail-road between that place and Charleston, which I have road with great ploasure. The meeting takes a different view of the rout from the one which I suggested, in my letter to you. It certainly has the advantage of being mure direct, and of passing through a large tract of interesting country, which now is almost shut out from the market. Not being locally acquainted with the projected rout, I had supposed, from my general conception of the country and tho inspection of the map of tho country, that very formidable, if not insurmountable dilliculties, would have to bo encountered in crossing the mountains in that direction. 1 hope my impression is erroneous. The country certainly deserves a careful rcconnoisanco, and if a rail-road bo practicable on the rout, it has many and powerful recommendations. The road would pass through tho entiro length of this Slate, say 25'.) miles, nearly half the entire distance; and I think I may say with confidence, that if Kentucky, lennesseo, and .North Carolina, through which it would pass, and which havo a docp interest in its execution, will exc-cuto the portions which may be within their respective limits, South Carolina will meet her Western brothron on the North-western limits with a well executed rail-road to her commercial capital. But, if the difficulty should be as great on the rout as I had supposed, still the great object of uniting tho West and the Southern Atlantic ports ought not, and, I trust, will not be abandoned. Its practicability on the rout I suggested cannot bo doubtod. Since I wroto, 1 iiave acquired still further information of the country in that quarter. A e;ontloinnn well acquainted with it informs me that there is a prospect of an excellent rout direct from Athens to tho Ten nessee river, just below tho Look-out Mountain, and that the distance between the two points does not exceed 150 miles; making the distance from Charleston to that point dull miles, and of course will greatly shorten the one I suggested, and Ml more within tho scope of the project contemplated at your meeting. Should both routs provo practicable, I see no reason why ono should supersede the other. The extent of country to be accommodated, and which would have a particular interest in ono or thn other routs, gives ample scope for both. The great point is, that rivalry and conflict should nut be permitted to defeat the grand design of uniting the two sections on the oxecution of which tho prosperity of so largo a portion of the Union depends, and which is calculated to exercise such powerful and beneficent influence over the future destiny ol our country ana Us institutions. With great rospoct, I am, &c. fee. J. U. CALHOUN. J. S. Williams, Esq. another person than the President. On asking him how he could find the heart to take away the life of so venerablo as well as good and excellent a man as Gen. Jackson, he said he conceived he was doing no inoro than attacking a public robber, and talked very wildly, and with great volubility, on his royal inheritance, and his rights to the sword and bank. On ask ing hun whether ho would have shot Mr. Van Duron in the tame way, he said " certainly," if he persisted in Jackson's policy of keeping from hi in this sword and bank; but he refused to say that he would shoot Mr. Poindexter, on our pur suing out the case into the probability of his being president. Uo seemed to thiok that Mr. Poindexter, or any other opposition member, would grant him his rights, and said uniformly that the majority of the Senate aud a great part of tho House of Representatives were on his side. During all of this conversation, the evidences of insanity in Lawrence were verv apparent: the ceaseless motion and wandering direction of the eye, the excited and tremulous pulse, and a tongue thickly furred, left no doubt as to his aillnont, and there were times when his countenance assumed an expression of almost demoniacal ferocity. The Vicksduiio Trauedy. Tho Cincinnati Gazotte publishes a letter of D. W. Hui.lum, an aged Clergyman, the father of one of the five gamblers hung by the citi.ens of Vicks-burg, addressed to the Governor of Mississippi. Tho letter is an appeal to the Governor fur justice. The aged father gives a brief statement of the aflVir at Vicksburg, and affirms that thore is no part of tho United States in which the vico of gambling it so generally practiced among the olficers of the law, rom the Supreme Judge down to the Constable. His appeal for justice concludes in the following terms: " These aro startling truths, and I allude to them not to palliate the onence, but to show that the recent crusade ut Vicksburg was nut so much tho result of a deep and abiding tenso of justice and virtue, as it was of wicked hearts, bad passions, personal revenge, and a reckless spirit of insubordination to tho laws. As an evidence, ono ol the principal actora was in the constant habit of visiting gaining houses, and who had previously, by Ins seductive arts, con trihutcd, perhaps more than any other man, to lead the unfortunate victim of his personal ven geance into theso sinks of iniquity. " Enclosed are the names of sixteen persons who were ongaged in this horrid tragedy, and the names of nine witnesses of the fact, which 1 humbly trust you will forward without delay to tho Attorney General, or other officer at Vicks burg, charged with the prosecution of the do fendants. " Merinos, Circassians, etc. CIRCASSIANS; English and French Merlnon; Slialllea: French lloinrtnElnes, Bonibaaetts; Lasting and Merino Prima. For lalo by S. & 8. II. HTANTON, Dec. -I..14. No. 4, Cominerclnl Row. Shawls, etc. 0-4 SCARLET and Black Merino Shawls; Kmbroiilcrrd Sliul-rasa, Thibet and Slmlly Do.; Merino, Thibet, lluuana, Crape, and Fancy Silk Handkerchief!. For aale by S. & S. B. PTANTOV, Dec. 4. .14. No. 4, Cnininerciul lluw. Miss Leslie's Pencil Sketches, 1st Scries, JUST rcrelved and for mle by MONnoR BKI.I,. Dec. 4. New Novels. WILL Watch, In 3 vol.; Normnn Loalie, in 2 vol. The llawka of Hawk Hollow, 2 vole.; Port Admiral. 3 roll. Paulding'! Letters from the South. Juat received by Dec. 4. MOXROK BELL. Malting and Brewing Establishment. A fine ononrtunltv now preaenla luelf to any ncraon diapoaed to purchnae or rent tan only ertaliliahed Brewery in the lown of tlrclcvlllc. TUB prenuaoa nmy ue aeen anu luimvi I'muium,. known, by an enrly call upon tlieaubacriber. Nov.27.-14:t C'ir. . junm ,-viur.r.c. Franklin Hank Notice! . thr ftnminl election for Director! of the Friiukllii Hank of Co luiubuB, will bo held at tin Banking bouso between the buura of 10, A. M. und 1, P. M. on the Ural .Monday oi jnnunry ncn. By order of tho Hoard. J. M. ESl'Y, Caali'r, Nov. 47 HOUSES, LANDS, ETC. City Property on High-street. THE itiliBcridon oiTer for iale the following raluablt property mm o ted on the Wound, viz: Lot No, 2J1 ilio, th undivided Imlf of Loti No. 358, 35'.. ml WO. If not prcvloml dlnj"iud of, will tt olTarod at public Ml tb 17(li dfiy of f)cc mlr next, Oct. ?. bf HtJRR, CRKCOnY tX CO. Town Property for Sale. THE siihicrJljcr will icll, on a short credit, and nt a low pric, Lot No. 11 in John M'Klvaln'i nddlilon to tho Town of Colum-bin, diroctly opposite lo Joseph Hunter't Steam gaw-mill. Tha home on said Lot u 48 by 15 fuel, one ilory lit?h, with a cellar under it 30 by 15 feci, and walled with stone in tho beat nienner. Also part of block No. 3 tn the Town of Houth Columbue, fronting on Front ptrcct 84j feet, ond on Public Lane 100 f'J nut kins a Lot 100 by 8Jj feet. The bullae on aald Lot ie 36 by 111 feet, l atory liitfli. with n good cellar undur it. The nhovc muncd houses are both well finiibcd and nearly new. folumbiM Nov. 27.-13 tf. AMOS BIXHV, 13..U4 New Roisters and Pillows, LARGE and well filled, for aaloatlbe iioreof Dec. 4.. 14 1 uiim Fish. THREE hundred till, while liali, 50 barrel! Lake llcrrin( KHI half barrel! do do 20 do trout. 200 barroli iiickercl do All freah.nnd lor aale by M'EI.VAIN, HUNTER & CO., Franklin llulldingi Nov. 27 BrondH. Sugar and Melassos. Tivtm vive bblrt. . O. auuar I 30 burrcla tnetnaac! 20 do. country do. lorenlcoy Nov.27..1 t M'EI.VAIN, lll.M Klleln'. Bran and Shorts. TWO IIIJNI1RED buabcll of tho above artlrlci, for lals by Nov. 27-.13 M'ELVAIX, 1I1JNTKK S CO. Cigars and Tobacco. 400 noxrl melee cljan I 30 kcia Ciiaoy'i No. 1 and 2 12.000 Soaniih do. loliarco. All juat received, and for lalo.at lowest prlcci.bv M'ELVAIN, HUNTER & CO. Nov. 27. Franklin Iluildlnji, Ilrond at., near tin llrltljn. FOR lalo by louses, Lots and Land, r. II. OI.MSTEI). Nov. 27. 20 Kegs Spiced Oysters, JUST received and for lale by J. P. & VV. DROOKS. Nov 20 12 FOR aale by Pure Cider Vinegar 1. P. b W I1ROOKH. Nov. 20-12 Nathan need J vs. lit Partition, The other hciri of Nathan Rcod. dee'd. S IN purauance of nn order from the Court of Common Pleea of Flrkaway county, Ohio, In tbii cnae, I ilinll offer for eal! 10 tb hlckMt l.fdrfor, ut the door of the Court-House tn Clrclevlltf, in aaiclcountyof Pickaway, on tho 15f!tay of Dteembsr next, th rnllowine-rfoarritiRtt innd, to wit: 200 acree on Mill Creek, In lb. comity ol Union, Ohio, being the north half of a 400 acre entry, No.o219: nlao, lola Nob. 11, 13 and Id, in the fourth quarter of the cizlilh townahip in the sixteenth range of tho United Slates Military Inude, lylne; in the county of Dolnware, In aald Blate, oiicb containing 100 acres; alao, 444 ncrea lying In the county of IMcknway nforeaaid, on tho watori of Deer Creek, No. of eurvey, 62112. A. L. PERKILL, Nov. 13 11 t15d Sheriff of Pickaway county. - The Ohio Slate Journal will publlahllll the day of aale, and forward their account lo this efficc. Cirrlmillt Herald. Valuable Land for Sale. THE auhacrlhor offer! for lalo tho following tract! of land, lo wit: 417 acre! on Wolf Creek, llurdin county; there is on tha premises a good Saw Mill, which cuta from 2000 to 2500 feet In 24 hours. 50 acres elenred smooth, liua four miles tolow Kenton, and near the rout surveyed or the Lake Erie and Mad river Rail Rnad. l.'iOacrca nenr Round Head, on the Scioto river, Hardin county 8.MI acrea on Rush Creak, Union county, No. of survey, 9917. lor terma, fee. annlyto M. II. Kirby, Esq., In Columhua.nrta the aubsrrlher, near Kcnlon, Ohio. R. T. MADISON. Oct. 30-9 tf Land for Sale. ' THE subscriber oilers for sale, 1300 acres of land in tho Darby I'laina, Madison county, about four miles west of Fuller'! mill. No. of lurvey, 7791. The whole under good fence: two small tenements on the land; constant wnler on the premises. Any person withlng tn eiigrigo In tho stock hualncis, will And tilt above premises desirnbly situated for the business. Fur terms, &'. apply lo M. II. Klrby, Ftq., In Columbul, or lo Cbarlea Arthur, nu ibe land. PLEASANT ARTHUR, Ocl. 309 tf. Highland County. Pew for Sale IN the Presbyterian Church, adv uitngeoualy eituated. Inquire) at the Journal office. Sept. 25 Klingensinitli, jr., Andrew llticlianan, Samuel S. Harrison, John Gnlbraith. DELAWARE. John J. Milligan. MARYLAND Jamet Turner, Daniel Jennifer, Geo. C. Washington, John Jr. Steele, Jamet A. Pearce, Isaao M'Kim, Donj. C. Howard, f rancit 1 homas. VIROIMIA. John Robertson, John Talliaferro, Charlet F. Mercer, William .VComru, Mith'l. II. Claiborne, Honrf A. Wise, George Loyall, John Y. Mason, J. Roane. John M. Patton, Geo. K. Dromgoole, John W. Jone, Thomas T. U. Hotildin, Waller Coles, James Garland, F.dirard Lucas, Jamci M. II. Bealo, ltoliert Craifr,. G. W. Hopkins, Joseph Johnson, Wm. S. Morgan. NORTH-CAROLINA I Ebenezcr Pettigrew, From the Georgetown (D. C.) Metropolitan. Lawrhnck. Through the kindness of a medical friend, we had an opportunity afforded us lately to pay a visit to the all but too celebrated Lawrence. This individual, who had to nearly attained in our annals tho rank of a Ita-vaillac. or a Fellon, is, as is well known, con fined in tho jail of Washington, in default of suitable accomodation in the District lor luna tics. Now that tho apprehensions which ho may be fairly presumed to have entertained with regard to hit trial must have subsided, and when tho atrocitv of his attempt had lost Die wild novel tv of oxcitcmout, and ordinary foelings might havo been supposed to have resumed their sway, wo foil tho greatest interest lo Know, mini per sonal observation, how far a peculiar idiosyn cracy might have contributed incitement to the tromcnuotis accu wuu wim u no is lurnuucu. We found Lawronce tilling bofore tho tlovc in the room which ho occupies in common with that Crandall. who has to thank tho jail for an escape from Lynching, and another. He is a short lliick-sel man, with an cxtorior by no means unprepossessing. Al li rat his convorsa expression of tho democracy of the State was j tion had nothing at all indicating insanity, lie Caution. As the cold weathor approaches and large fires are necessary for comfort, it is the duly of parents lo change tho inflammable cotton summer garments of their children, for tho lest combustible material ol woolen, in or dor to guard against the sad accidents, which we regret to say, not unfrequently happen every rear, especially at the commencement ol winter. Thcro cannot be a fato moro dreadful, either to a child or an adult, than that of being burned to death; and as shocking instances have occurred not only to children, but lo females, we cannot but advert to the discovery of diehard Phillips, published some time since in an Ktiglish periodical, fur their provonlion. H illiir.ad from tho principle of tho ascension of flame, that ladies ought to lio down so soon n they discover their clothes to be on fire, that tho prog-rest of tho flame will by that means be instantly checked, and may ho easily extinguished, with out anv fatal injury, as usual, to the head, the face, bosom or tliroat. He proved his principle bv the following experiment: he took two slips of printed cotton, a yard long, and on lighting ono of them at the lower end, holding it perpen dicular, it was consumed to a cinder in a fifth of a minute, and tho volume of name was so great as to rise two feet. He then lighted an exactly similar piece of cotton and laid it horizontally on a nair of toners, so as to bo hollow, and in this situation it was five minutes burning, and the flames at no ono time ascended an inch in height and might have been extinguished by the thumb or finger. This plain and easy experiment ought to bo read in tho presenco of the females of every family. Uoston .iter. wuti. "All Eiieeuee at the risk of the owner.1' To lest tho nporution of litis advertisement, so com mon on the part of public carriers, two suits were lately instituted ngnmst the uamacn ana Amuoy Rail-road Uompanv. isotn cases resulted in vor. diets with ample damages for the Plaintiffs. On the 18th ult. tliocaso of Belknap against the above Company wus tried in the Supreme Court beforo Chief Justico Jones. I he lollowing re. port of tho cass is from tho Commercial Advor tisor: It was iirced on tho nart of tho defendants lhat tho missing proporty, a trunk, was merely placed in the oilice, while tho plainlilf waspaying-his faro as a passenger: tho advertisement announcing that the company would not be an werahln, cVc. was road in Court. It was.con lotuled for tho plaintiff, that although tho do fendants did give notice that they refused to ba responsible for tho loss of proporty falling into their possession in tho regular coiirso of their bimncss, yet it availed mem nothing, anu they weio liable for tho loss or destruction, under such circumstances, of any property bo l.iniriiirr to other persons. In his charge to the jury, the loarned Judge coincided with the ar minienla o t 10 n Iu nllll counsel. eiruiiii u cordingly for tho plaintiff. Damages $:U)fl Butter. 20 keffs butter, 10 jars do. November 20. for inle by J. P. it W. D1100K9. 12 Ciissimcres. A FINK naaortment of buckskin, ribbed and fancy alriped tnssl-meres, Just received and for sale by . & P. n. STANTON', Nov.20--12 N'o. dConitnerrlal Row. Dye StulTs. INDIGO, madder, ground log and nle woods, for enlo by 8. 4 8. n. 8TANT0X, Nov. 20. .12. No. 4 Commercial Row. The Comic, German and English Almanac for 1036. for sale by P. II. OLMSTED. Nov. 20.12 Stoves and Hollow Wruf, AT furnace prices, for l ile by S. W. & J. E. PA l.MEtl, Nov. 20.. 12 No. 3, Exchange llulldinsa, Broad-It. Warranted Cast Steel Axes, ROCHESTER make, for aale by S. W. (t J. E. PALMER, Nov. 20-. 12 No. 3, ExchaiiL'C lluildinca, Hrond-at. Block Tin, Sheet Iron, Copper, &c, TIN 1-3 X, Mock tin, fliontlilnj copi-cr. do. tinned, EnjiHilmnd Rum In il.cet Iron for nle ly i. w. tn J. vaiik. Nor. 20.. 12 N Kiciianao uumnnRH, uroan n HKH) fect Lead 1'ipe, ASSORTED bores, for lale by S. W. 4 J. E. PALMEIl, Nov. 20.. 12 No. 3, Exchange llutldlnua, llrond-at. Dry Goods. jVo. 8 and 10 Exchange Buildings. THREE HUNDRED packagea Dry Good!, enmprlalng very xtenalva assortment rocclvod and altered at wholesale and retail allow prices by CHA Jiriun s 1 ur. Nov. 20. .12 - two to one in favor of Gov. Wolf, have they not seen the members of Congress, tho partisans of Van Huren in Pennsylvania, holding a meeting and entoring into an absolute conspiracy to divide tho parly, for the purpose of defeating Gov. Woll, and indirectly enacting me eiocuoa 01 Ritnerl What Democrat would submit to such vile intriguesl We can tell the partisans of Mr. Van Uuren that wheo the peoplo of I'onn-sylvania aro so fallen, they will no longe. ba ca pable or maintaining tneir itoerty, anu win oe prepared to receive tho yoke of any foreign usurper who may choose to put it upon them; and that they have intelligence enough to see this, and havo spirit enough to resist it. Never will Pennsylvania suffer herself to become a mero tool in the hands ol political gamuiors, to be shuflled about to suit their purposes. Rot if the leaders of tho Wolf party aro op posed to Van Uuren, as tho Journal lolomnly assorts its belief, prav what are bis prospects in Pennsylvania! The opposition to Van Huron, as indicated by Ilitnor'i vote, is H4,IUHI strong. Now if tho Wolf party really are, as tho Journal savs. of a similar cast, so far as Van Huron is concerned, it is evident from the calculation of bis own friends, that the Macician'i wand has been moved upon Pennsylvania in vain. Thii is the calculation of the leading and most tal onted Van I) 11 re n Journal in tho .Stale. It car ries cold comfort to Mr. Van Huren and his friends. When a foreign aspirant endeavors to plant his standard in our Stale, by interfering io our local politics, and attempts to put up or spoko of his confinement, of his health, appetite, fiC in a manner perfectly natural and appro priate, and the conversation wandored oil into a variety of subjects, on all of which he deliver ed himself willi ease and volubility, his counte nance ovidoncing all tho while, as far as physiognomy afforded a clue, a degroe of openness and candor which we would scarcely havo expected. It was not until, as it were, by an accidental coutingoncy of the conversation, that the bank was mentioned, that the diseased chord in his mind was touchod. Once, however, woke, it jarred the whole system. He ontared into the subject with great oagerness, and detailed at length hit intentions and plans for killing the President. Among other rcmaruaDlo instan ces, if we might so spoaK 01 mat niciuity 01 cunning, by which madmen aro Known to carry out their schemes, ho stated thai lie reserved nis fire at tho President until he felt suro from his position lhat the ball after passing through him would not kill another ho expressed great sorrow for the failuro of his attempt, and said lhat tho powder had boon abstracted from tho pistol tho night boforo by ono of his follow boarders that when he saw the President coming, ho had the presenco of mind," wo quoto his own words, " to look into the moulli of tho pistols to see that all was right, and observing the balls, concluded that It was so." It may hero be mentioned, as an evidence of Lawrence's gon-eral humanity, that be said, on tho question bo- ing put to hun, that he would rather have giv Webster's Speeches, etc. lt!ST received at the Store of Monroe Bell, Webltor'a Snoerhea, coiiinlele in 2 vole. I Bryant'! Poems ; Mrs. Sigourney I Praams; Pope'e Pocmi, complete in i vol ; i.niuainiui rc,., m. Mnrklntnab's lllatorv of the Revolution In England In l(5i!8, 1 vol Mnahslm'l Church lllalory, 2 voli.l Large 410 Alhuma, &e. ccf All of which will be Mid al tha loweit ptlcea. Pk. 4. Eherle's Practice New Edition. 4. Treatiie on lbs Practice of Medicine: By John Eberle, M. I) o.n'sBvn. Third edition, reviled and enlarged. Just pub lished, aud for sal! by ISAAC N. WHITI.SO. Doc. 4. Cheap JJuildinf: Lots. STARLING k CILIIERT offer for aals Twenty Loll, beautifully aituatcd opposito the lluirh College. For terms, whieh will be nmtlc oaay, itinulro at llielr Office on Siigor otloy, Aug. 2fi.-lf For Sale, at a bargain. TWO amnll and convenient HOUSES, with a half lot attached to each, on lot .'o. 771, Rich-street. Inquire of August 211 If BTARLIN'O A OILnERT. To Let, TUP. second, third and fourth stories in No. 1 , Broadway Ex change Buildings. Apply to W. II. RICHARDS Valuable Property for Sale, IS the city of Columbus, Ohio. 120 In Lols 624 by 1871 feet. dU Out-Lota 2t acres each. These Lots are well and pleasantly situated; and v-lll bo sold by the single lot, or the whole, ae may suit Ibe purchaser. O. at B. CROSBY. August 4. 11135. GO Doctor James Irons RESPECTFULLY tender! his professional service! to the cltl-sens of Columbus and the sunnundlng country; and hopee, hy strict attention to business, to sliate a part of public patronage. Hie OfTire U on Mnrkct-sircct, in the House recently occcnpleil bv Mr. Warren Jonkliis, and opposite the residence of Colonel Olmsted. Nov. 6 10 Albany Planes, FOR SALE II V S. W. tt i. E. PALMER, Nov. 20. .1? No- 3, Exchange Rullillues. Urond St. Carpeting. FINE, Superfine and Extra Superfine Ingrain Cirpollngi. I J and 4-4 Venlllan Carpeting, a handsome assortment just received and for sale by CHAMPION & LATIIItol', Nov. 20. .12 o tu ma.j "'""" Broad Cloths. Cassnneres, fcattincts and Vcatinga, a line assortment of qualilra and rolnre for lale low ly CHAMPION t LATIIROP, 12 No. B and 10 Broadway urnanae. Nov. 50. Silks. m.K.Grol de Nape, Groi de mvwa, uros nc nuine; a anu a , Italian, Synsbew and Snrslnell; plain and figured, eol'd, and black Gros de Nop., a full asaorlmen: for anlo by lllAMrii'.i ol i. Allium-, Nov. 20.. 12 N'- 8 4,,d 10 Broadway Exchange. New Establishment. fl. (k fl. I). STANTON have Inken the Store No. 4, Commercial Row, next door below A. P. Stone, whore they havo Justr-celvi-d and they are new opening n general aeaortment of FALL AND WINTER 8TAFI.R AND FANCY DRY OOODS; Hate, Cnpa, Boola, Shod, Hardware mid Grocerlei; which they offer Wbolcanle and Retail on ll-.n moat rcaeonahle terma, for caih, or In exchnncefor Country Produco. Oct, 309 7v Pistols, Dirks, Knives, &c. JUST received at the City Auction Store, a large nuanllly of rocket Pislota, and fine Dirkl, Dirk Knlvc!, e. etc. Oct. 309 tf 20 dozen Axes. JI'ST received. SO doa. Caat Steel Axel, of a superior quality madeexpreaaly fur thla market, for aale by the doun oraingle, by Oct. 311 - Wl LI.IAM M. KABSON. Superior Teas, RECENTLY Imported by the ihlpaCynthla. Ilermlei, Coll-euaa. and Sachem, among which aro Imperial, Gunpowder, Old llyaon and Young Hyaon. Juit received and for lale very low at the ProvUion and Family Grocery of Oct. 2J-B J. P. - W. BROOKB. Cotlec. rORTO RICO, Rio and Java Coffee, all of the belt quality, for sale hy J. P & W. BROOKS. Ocl. -l Mcrinoes. FRENCH and Engllah Slerlnoes, a great variety of nullities and colors, for sole by CHAMPION J; i.atmkiii-. Nov. 20.. 1 3 No. 8 and 10 llronuway r.xrnnnge. Taper. THREE HUNDRED reams letter, cap. and wrapping. Two bales paper hangings, for aale low hy CHAMPION fc I.ATHROP, Nov. 50. .12 No. H and 10 Broadway Exchange. Nijiars. LOAF and Lump augar, New Orieaaa (a luperlor article.) anfl SI . Crnl i , for aa lo by J. P. IV. B R IOKB. Oct. 23 8 Shoes. FIFTY enaei hoots and iboes, comprising a large variety ol gentlemen'! and ladle!', for inle law, hy curtail nirt re i... i "iwi , Nov. 20-.12 No. 8 and 10 Rroadway Exchange. . . -k, .- I IT I, Uent einen's riain and junncn lianio si WOOL and merino shirts and drawers. Ladies, merino rests and drawer!, for lale by CHAMPION ti I.ATHROP, Nov. 20- 12 "ni1 10 "roadway Exchange. Monroe Bell HAS litis dav received alarge and I'eanllfnl assortment of Wsi.t. Pra and Doaoaaiao, consisting of near 2000 piercsWall Paper and 500 Bordering, whleh he will sell nt a small advance on Enstern cost. Jf rtrtTk BUSHELS OP WHEAT! November 20. New Music Book. THE Western Mlnalrel, or Ohio Melodiat ! eontnlning a choice collection of Moral, Palrlotle and Sentimental Songs, with tho appropriate Millie, for each plnre In Patent Notes, carefully se lected and amxeil thereto; logeiuer wuu inairucnuii. era. Being woll calculated lo give a correct knowledge of Vocal Music ; and also designed in assist learners oi me imuaaamai Branch of that Science. For aale bylhodoaen or elude copy hy I)(,c.4. ISAAC N. WHITING. Boots and Shoes. JUST received, 20 ensei first quality bonti and ihoes, by Nov 13. S. it S. B. STANTON, No. 4. Commercial Row. Salt. 100 his. Zaneaville Salt, for sale by . Nov. 13..tf fl. A 8. n. STANTON, No. 4, Cominerclnl Bow. Notice. il.l. Indebted tn thn late drill ofOmsTt a & Sr. Ci.aia mm hat nil unsettled acconiita and notea due aald Arm on the let day of Jnnunry, 1036. will ho placed In the hand! of proper nfHrnri for collodion, without ra.pecl to persona; and all persona Indebted to the auhacrlhor for more than ill months, are rcuurstcd to call and settle Immediately. Columbus, Nov. 27-13 P. II. OLMSTED, en up his rights than gained them by killing reiurohui, Feb. 10. 1W3. Save your Ashes! g g af.), lll'SIIELS OF ASHES wanted by ibe 1 (?(lf!.F subscriber, at the Soap and Candle Manufactory at the west end of the Bridge. r.. ii. iia..."i.,. 23 tf Streeter's Ily.itns, FOR inle hythe docen or aingle copy, al the nnnktdnrenf Ocl 23 R MONROE BELL. Prime Orleans Suar and CoiTee. FOR aale. by the harrrel and hag. by L. M'CUI. LOUGH, Ocl. Hi. 7 3m On'"" " "' City House, R Y MRS. ROBINSON et SON, High Ural J ft rJi ( of lea S'aU-ltomt, Cot.rMni-s, Onto. Wines. 11 MT Madeira Wine, from ti l Vintage of 1A25 Superior Canary do " do 1H27 Rarrlay's best Tort do ' " do 11 1630 Dry Malaga do. Persons desirous of purchasing unadulterated wines srl roe-pertfully Invllod to call. J. V. It W. BROOKS. Oct. 2.18 Fish. 10 Quintals end Fish, the best. aver brought to this market. Also, Mackerel, Shad and Salmon, Jusl received and for sale by Oct. 2.1-8 J. P. - W. BROOKS. Wanted, for which I will pay the highest pries In CASH, al my mil!, nne milo xveit of Columbus. Jan. 18.-28 tf WM. fl. SL'I.HVAST, Mill Stones ! Cheap fir Cash or good Lumber. A FEW palnof Itiirnon Burr Mill Slonci, warranted to bo flnt quality of tlio following aires: 3, 3J, and 4 feet for sale by Cnluinl.iia, .Mayail-fal lf W. A. GILL ft CO. Removal. pTsni.itm Ic Gtt.BKBT have removed their Law Offiea tha building on Sugar allry nrcupicd by Col. Lyne Starllng.and op posite the house of M. Northmp, Esq. Juno 2), 1835. a Rags Wanted. ISAAC N. WHITING continues to pay the litgheit prises tot Rags, either In Ctsh or trade. May 30, 1835 50 To Country Merchants &. Booksellers, WEBSTER'S r.lemcntary Spelling Book, for sals by the sua, scrlhor, tn Culunihus TTRAGS will be taken in exebange for any quantity. July 31. 5!) C. SCOTT. Health Secured ! BY the IIVOEIAN VEGETABLE MEDICINES preparadby Ibe British College of lleallh for sale, on commission, hy Muylfi,.48 STEWART It OSIIORN. Hopkins' (Jenuine Razor Strop. A supply of (lie above article Juat received and for sale by Oct. ill.l5.-5 I'. H. OLMSTED. Apprentice AV anted TO the Silveramithlng bnalni-aa. A s narl boy, of good hahlla 15 or lb yean Ol ago. rne iruin um counu, " " , red. November !J. A. PLATT, If A New Law Book. CRIMINAL EVIDENCE. The auhaerlbera have In press, and will reprint wllf-uut ilelsv, "A Dli-est of tho Law of Evidenca in Criminal Caare. Bv Henry Roscoe, Esq. of the Inner Ten), pie, Barrister at Law." P. IT. Nicklin it T. Johnson, Kept. 1 I..W Bookrellers. 175 Cfeinut-at. PhlMclh1